A telemetry system enabling radio-frequency communications between an implantable medical device and an external device which requires minimal power consumption by the implantable device. The implantable device uses an antenna tuning circuit to vary the impedance of an antenna and phase modulate a carrier signal reflected back to the external device with digital message data.
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17. A method for enabling data transfer from an implantable medical device to an external device, comprising:
transmitting a radio-frequency carrier signal from a transmitter antenna of the external device to an antenna of the implantable device which reflects the radio-frequency carrier signal;
adjusting the impedance of the implantable device antenna in a time varying manner so as to phase modulate the radio-frequency carrier signal reflected therefrom in accordance with a digital data signal; and,
receiving the phase modulated carrier signal reflected from the implantable device antenna at a receiver antenna of the external device and extracting the digital data signal therefrom;
wherein the transmitter and receiver antennas are linearly polarizing antennas orthogonal to one another and the implantable antenna is elliptically polarizing.
1. A telemetry system for enabling transfer of message data from an implantable medical device to an external device, comprising:
an implantable medical device;
an external device;
a transmitter and a transmitter antenna incorporated as part of the external device for transmitting a radio-frequency carrier signal to the implantable device;
an implantable device antenna incorporated as part of the implantable device for reflecting the radio-frequency carrier signal;
a tuning circuit incorporated as part of the implantable device for adjusting the impedance of the implantable device antenna in a time varying manner so as to phase modulate the radio-frequency carrier signal reflected therefrom in accordance with the message data;
a receiver and a receiver antenna incorporated as part of the external device for receiving the phase modulated carrier signal reflected from the antenna of the implantable device and extracting the message data therefrom; and,
wherein the transmitter and receiver antennas are linearly polarizing antennas orthogonal to one another and the implantable device antenna is elliptically polarizing.
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This invention pertains to implantable medical devices such as cardiac pacemakers and implantable cardioverter/defibrillators. In particular, the invention relates to a telemetry system and method for such devices.
Implantable medical devices, including cardiac rhythm management devices such as pacemakers and implantable cardioverter/defibrillators, typically have the capability to communicate data with a device called an external programmer via a radio-frequency telemetry link. One use of such an external programmer is to program the operating parameters of an implanted medical device. For example, the pacing mode and other operating characteristics of a pacemaker are typically modified after implantation in this manner. Modern implantable devices also include the capability for bidirectional communication so that information can be transmitted to the programmer from the implanted device. Among the data which may typically be telemetered from an implantable device are various operating parameters and physiological data, the latter either collected in real-time or stored from previous monitoring operations.
Telemetry systems for implantable medical devices utilize radio-frequency (RF) energy to enable bidirectional communication between the implantable device and an external programmer. An exemplary telemetry system for an external programmer and a cardiac pacemaker is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,562,841, issued to Brockway et al. and assigned to Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc., the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. A radio-frequency carrier is modulated with digital information, typically by amplitude shift keying where the presence or absence of pulses in the signal constitute binary symbols or bits. The external programmer transmits and receives the radio signal with an antenna incorporated into a wand that can be positioned in proximity to the implanted device. The implantable device also generates and receives radio signals by means of an antenna, typically formed by a wire coil wrapped around the periphery of the inside of the device casing.
Most conventional radio-frequency telemetry systems used for implantable medical devices such as cardiac pacemakers utilize inductive coupling between the antennas of the implantable device and an external programmer in order to transmit and receive RF signals. Because the induction field produced by a transmitting antenna falls off rapidly with distance, such systems require close proximity between the implantable device and a wand antenna of the external programmer in order to work properly, usually on the order of a few inches. This requirement is an inconvenience for a clinician and limits the situations in which telemetry can take place.
Wireless radio-frequency communication over greater distances requires the use of far-field telemetry. Communication using far-field radiation can take place over much greater distances which makes it more convenient to use an external programmer. Also, the increased communication range makes possible other applications of the telemetry system such as remote monitoring of patients and communication with other types of external devices.
In order for a substantial portion of the energy delivered to an antenna to be emitted as far-field radiation, the wavelength of the driving signal should not be very much larger than the length of the antenna. Far-field radio-frequency communications with an antenna of a size suitable for use in an implantable device therefore requires a carrier in the frequency range of between a few hundred MHz to a few GHz. An active transmitter for this frequency range requires special RF components (typically including SiGe or GaAs semiconductor devices) that consume a significant amount of power (typically tens of milliwatts). There is no problem with providing such a transmitter in an external programmer which is connected to an external power source. Implantable medical devices, however, are powered by a battery contained within the housing of the device that can only supply a limited amount of peak power, and many batteries in use today are not capable of supplying power sufficient to power an RF transmitter. Even if sufficient power can be supplied, the battery has a limited life span. When the battery fails, it must be replaced which necessitates a reimplantation procedure. Implantable medical devices are also necessarily small, with only a limited space available for locating complex RF circuitry, especially in view of the fact that the RF circuitry needs to be isolated and shielded from the rest of the device circuitry to prevent interference. These factors make it difficult to satisfactorily implement a far-field RF transmitter in an implantable medical device.
The present invention is a telemetry system and method that enables far-field radio-frequency data transmission from an implantable medical device to an external device without the need for an active transmitter. In accordance with the invention, a radio-frequency carrier signal is transmitted from an antenna of the external device to an antenna of the implantable device. The impedance of the implantable device antenna is adjusted in a time varying manner with a tuning circuit in accordance with digital message data that is to be transmitted. The result is a phase modulated carrier signal reflected from the implantable device antenna back to the external device. The phase modulated carrier signal can then be demodulated at the external device to recover the digital message data.
The present invention is a system and method for providing RF telemetry between an implantable medical device and an external device in which data is passively transmitted from the implantable device. The system allows far-field RF telemetry to be implemented without the need for an active transmitter in the implantable device
The microprocessor 102 of the external device is interfaced to a radio-frequency transmitter 110 and receiver 120 that are both connected to an antenna 101. A directional coupler 130 passes radio-frequency signals unidirectionally from the transmitter to the antenna and from the antenna to the receiver. Upon a command from the microprocessor, the transmitter 110 generates a radio-frequency carrier signal for a specified time period that is emitted from the antenna 101. The transmitted carrier signal then reaches the antenna 201 of the implantable device where it is reflected back to the antenna 101 of the external device. By varying the impedance of the antenna 201, the implantable device modulates the phase of the reflected carrier in accordance with digital message data that is to be transmitted to the external device. After reaching the antenna 101, the reflected carrier signal is conveyed through the directional coupler to the receiver 120 where the signal is demodulated to extract the digital message data. The digital data may then be processed and interpreted by software executed by the microprocessor 102.
The directional coupler 130 of the external device enables the receiver 120 to receive signals without interference from signals simultaneously emitted by the antenna 101 that originate from the transmitter 110. As an alternative to the directional coupler, separate antennas with orthogonal linear polarization states can be provided for the transmitter and receiver, with the antenna of the implantable device then designed to reflect elliptically polarized radio waves. For example, the antennas of the external device transmitter and receiver may be monopole or dipole antennas oriented at right angles to one another, while the implantable device antenna is a loop or helical antenna. The external device receiver antenna is blind to waves radiated by the transmitter antenna but is sensitive to waves reflected by the implantable device antenna, thus enabling simultaneous radiation of the carrier signal by the transmitter antenna and reception of the reflected carrier by the receiver antenna. Another alternative to using a directional coupler is for the external device to transmit the carrier signal in discrete bursts and receive the signal reflected by the implantable device between the bursts, with the transmitter and receiver being alternately connected to the antenna by a switch.
In the implantable device 200, the microprocessor is interfaced to a data transmitter 210 that includes circuitry for encoding digital message data received from the microprocessor and time-varying the impedance of the antenna 201 accordingly. A radio-frequency carrier signal reflected from the antenna while the impedance is so varied is thus phase modulated with the digital data using some variant of phase-shift keying. In one embodiment, the implantable device periodically varies the antenna impedance with the same message data in order to transmit the data whenever an external device transmits a carrier signal. In another embodiment, a radio-frequency receiver 220 is provided as shown in the figure that enables the external device to communicate with the implantable device. Such radio-frequency communications may take place over a different communications channel using a different carrier frequency and/or modulation method than used in the passive telemetry system described herein. When the implantable device receives a data request from the external device, it may then expect the carrier signal to be transmitted and can initiate a data transfer by varying the impedance of the antenna. Although a radio-frequency receiver does consume a significant amount of power, this is minimized by only using it for short periods in order to initiate communications with passive telemetry.
In one embodiment, the reference carrier R(t) used in the examples of
The external device may transmit the carrier signal to the implantable device in bursts having durations of one symbol period or a plurality of symbol periods. In the former case, the phase shift of each reflected burst is detected in order to determine which symbol is being transmitted. A burst with a reference symbol (i.e., with zero phase shift) is periodically reflected by the implantable device so that the phase of reference carrier can be adjusted, and succeeding bursts are then transmitted at regular intervals in order to maintain the proper phase relationship between the reference carrier and the reflected carrier. In an exemplary implementation, a 403 MHz carrier is employed for data transmission, as the FCC has recently set aside a nominal frequency of 403 MHz channelized into 300 kHz channels for medical device communications. In order to constrain the data transmission to a bandwidth of less than 300 kHz, 10 microsecond bursts of the carrier are transmitted, with each burst separated by an interval of 10 microseconds. With one symbol per burst, the symbol rate is then 50 kilosymbols per second, which is well below the theoretical maximum of 600 kilosymbols per second allowed by the 300 kHz channel. If the data is encoded as two bits per symbol (i.e., quadrature phase-shift keying), the maximum data rate attainable by this particular scheme is then 100 kilobits per second, minus the overhead associated with periodically transmitting reference symbols.
In another embodiment, each burst of the carrier signal transmitted by the external device is modulated with a plurality of symbols by the reflecting antenna of the implantable device. The duration of the bursts may then be made arbitrarily long so that data transmission is continuous while the external device is transmitting. Each reflected burst may then contain one or more reference symbols in order to maintain the locally generated reference carrier at the proper phase. As an alternative to employing a reference carrier to demodulate the reflected signal, the data may be transmitted by the implantable device using differential phase-shift keying. In this type of modulation, symbols are encoded into the carrier waveform as the phase shifts between succeeding symbol periods rather than with respect to a reference carrier. This allows demodulation to be accomplished without the need for generating a reference carrier.
It should be appreciated that the demodulation of the carrier signal by the external device in any of the embodiments described above may be accomplished by either analog circuit elements or entirely in the digital domain. In the latter case, the reflected carrier signal is received by the antenna of the external device and digitized using a sampling rate at least twice that of the carrier frequency. The correlation operations may then be performed by code executed by the microprocessor or a dedicated digital signal processor.
A complicating factor in implementing a passive telemetry system that has not been mentioned thus far is the backscattering of the carrier signal by surfaces other than the antenna of the implantable device. When the carrier signal is transmitted to the implantable device by the external device, the signal is reflected by other surfaces in the environment and received by the external device antenna at various phase angles in addition to the modulated carrier signal. Even if a reference carrier is properly generated or differential phase-shift keying is used, the additive effects of this backscattered radiation decreases the phase distance between the symbols of the modulated carrier. For example, the 0 and 180 degree phase shifts used to represent symbols in binary phase-shift keying may be received by the external device as 0 and 20 degrees of phase shift. In order to compensate for this effect, the voltage thresholds used by the symbol decoder 123 to convert the output of the correlator 125 into digital data need to be adjusted accordingly so that the actual phase shifts detected by the correlator are interpreted as symbols. Such adjustments of the symbol thresholds may be made manually or dynamically using a training sequence.
Although the invention has been described in conjunction with the foregoing specific embodiment, many alternatives, variations, and modifications will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. Such alternatives, variations, and modifications are intended to fall within the scope of the following appended claims.
Von Arx, Jeffrey A., Mass, William R.
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